Gone in 60 Seconds

   / Gone in 60 Seconds
  • Thread Starter
#51  
The Italian Job 1969, Michael Caine, Noel Coward vs The Italian Job 2003, Mark Wahlberg, Donald Sutherland. I’m going with the original here, for the love of all things Mini Cooper. And come on, who would you rather see, Charlize Theron or Benny Hill? I already wanted a Mini Cooper since I was 5 years old, then this movie put me over the top at 10. Cried when they all had to go over the cliff.
Italian-Job_The-web.jpg
 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #52  
The Italian Job 1969, Michael Caine, Noel Coward vs The Italian Job 2003, Mark Wahlberg, Donald Sutherland. I’m going with the original here, for the love of all things Mini Cooper. And come on, who would you rather see, Charlize Theron or Benny Hill? I already wanted a Mini Cooper since I was 5 years old, then this movie put me over the top at 10. Cried when they all had to go over the cliff.
View attachment 1747152
 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #53  
And come on, who would you rather see, Charlize Theron or Benny Hill?
You had me, until here. I'll take Theron over Benny Hill.

1730822326683.png

Besides, they're both great! Why choose? Watch them both!
 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds
  • Thread Starter
#54  
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #55  
One of the greatest stories ever put to film, and maybe more times than any other story I can recall, would be Dickens' A Christmas Carol. I try to watch at least a few versions of this every year, but with 200 films, TV episodes, or animations of this story from major studios and maybe several hundred more less well-known, I suspect very few have seen them all. Hell, Sanford and Son even did an episode called Ebenezer Sanford (1975)

Which is best? I've always been partial to the Reginald Owen version from 1938. Most seem to cite the Alstair Sim version from 1951, but I honestly never understood that. But even the Reginald Owen version is not "best", it's just a personal favorite.

Ironically, the one that's probably the most well-done and true to the book is the one Jim Carrey and Gary Oldman did with Disney in 2009. If there had to be one "best", despite being animated, this is probably the one.

There was a very cool and rather dark version done in 1971, animated short at 26 minutes, made to fit a standard half-hour TV block. It was a fun one to watch with the kids when they were young, and attention spans too short to watch a feature-length movie. That one had Alastair Sim return to do the voice of Scrooge, and again it's not the "best", just another personal favorite.

Bill Murray's "Scrooged" is also always a fun watch, 1988. Love the Bobcat Goldthwait character, in that one.
 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #56  
Meh, I tend to prefer girls like the ones Benny liked in the 1969 movie;)
He did have some cute girls on that show. I just didn't think he was much to look at. :p
 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #57  
Meh, I tend to prefer girls like the ones Benny liked in the 1969 movie;)
I have to side with Benny. He brought me a lot of female joy as a kid watching his show at midnight.😍:ROFLMAO:
 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #58  
You had me, until here. I'll take Theron over Benny Hill.

View attachment 1747175

Besides, they're both great! Why choose? Watch them both!

One of the greatest stories ever put to film, and maybe more times than any other story I can recall, would be Dickens' A Christmas Carol. I try to watch at least a few versions of this every year, but with 200 films, TV episodes, or animations of this story from major studios and maybe several hundred more less well-known, I suspect very few have seen them all. Hell, Sanford and Son even did an episode called Ebenezer Sanford (1975)

Which is best? I've always been partial to the Reginald Owen version from 1938. Most seem to cite the Alstair Sim version from 1951, but I honestly never understood that. But even the Reginald Owen version is not "best", it's just a personal favorite.

Ironically, the one that's probably the most well-done and true to the book is the one Jim Carrey and Gary Oldman did with Disney in 2009. If there had to be one "best", despite being animated, this is probably the one.

There was a very cool and rather dark version done in 1971, animated short at 26 minutes, made to fit a standard half-hour TV block. It was a fun one to watch with the kids when they were young, and attention spans too short to watch a feature-length movie. That one had Alastair Sim return to do the voice of Scrooge, and again it's not the "best", just another personal favorite.

Bill Murray's "Scrooged" is also always a fun watch, 1988. Love the Bobcat Goldthwait character, in that one.
For a funny very "Short" version I have to go with SNL Steve Martin and Martin Short.


 
   / Gone in 60 Seconds #60  
Re: Original Vanishing Point Camaro into bulldozers.


Nick of Nick's Garage in Montreal built a "Kowalski" car from a basket case, numbers matching car
 

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